IFC has partnered with Nerve.com to co-produce a third season of this long-standing hit from “mumblecore” filmmaker Joe Swanberg (Hannah Takes The Stairs, and the upcoming feature Nights and Weekends).
A candid, no-holds-barred look at the intersecting love lives of six 20-somethings in Chicago, Young American Bodies is intimate and fearless in its scope, and timely in its relevance and importance. The series first two seasons – 20 episodes in total – debuted on Nerve.com, and IFC.com will present the world premiere of Season 3 of this powerful narrative. Produced, written and directed by Joe Swanberg. Co-produced and co-written by Kris Williams.

Join AirUtopia at the biggest Airport in American - Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport! See the amazing variety of international traffic includes KLM, Lufthansa, British Airways, Mexicana, Aeromexico Travel, TACA, China Cargo and Singapore Airlines operating alongside every aircraft type in the massive fleet of hometown favorite American Airlines! Enjoy DFW's massive aircraft viewing area and see for yourself why it's the best airport observation park open in the USA today!

Kvitka Cisyk (Kasey Cisyk) (Ukrainian: Квітка Цісик, April 4, 1953 in Queens, New York March 29, 1998 in New York City) was a soprano singer best known to the Ukrainian-speaking world for her two albums of Ukrainian folk and pop songs, "Kvitka, Songs of Ukraine" and "Kvitka, Two Colors". Her name, Kvitka, is Ukrainian for "flower". To the English-speaking world she was known as Kacey (from her initials, K.C.), the voice behind commercial messages for products such as Coca-Cola, American Airlines, Mr. Pibb, Sears, JC Penney, Safeway grocery stores and Starburst candies. She did a lot of work for Ford, and sang the slogan "Have you driven a Ford lately?" In the 1970s she also recorded two movie soundtracks, "You Light Up My Life" (1977 Oscar Winning song) and "The One and Only". Her father, Wolodymyr Cisyk, a concert violinist and teacher, taught her to play the violin when she was 5 years old. Her greatest love was Ukrainian song, and in 1980 she recorded her first album, Kvitka, Songs of Ukraine which won top honors in the 1988 Ukrainian Music Awards. Her second album, Kvitka, Two Colors, was dedicated to "the spirit of the Ukrainian soul, whose wings can never be broken." Today, songs from both albums can be heard on radio in Ukraine. Both albums where nominated for a Grammy Award in 1990. Both "Song of Ukraine" and "Two Colors" were family projects. Kvitka's husband, Ed Rakowicz, a recording engineer, produced them. Her sister, Maria Cisyk, a concert pianist and teacher, played piano for them. Her mother, Ivanna, made sure that Kvitka's Ukrainian pronunciation was perfect. Cisyk died of breast cancer in 1998...pls. enjoy!!!